11 December, 2020

Families Yesterday vs. Famthblies Today

Posted by Socrates in "gay marriage", "gay pride", "gay", homosexual themes, homosexuals, Socrates at 11:04 am | Permanent Link

Homosexual #1: “A famthbly canth be anythinth you thayth. Ith can beth three menth and five dogth!” [1].

Homosexual #2: “Yeth! How darth you thayth thath we’re noth a famthbly!”

Homosexual #3: “Your’th juth a bunch of hate-mongerth!”

[Article].

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[1] “Gay ‘lisp’: What’s sometimes incorrectly described as a gay “lisp” is one manner of speech stereotypically associated with gay speakers of North American English, and perhaps other dialects or languages. It involves a marked pronunciation of sibilant consonants (particularly /s/ and /z/). Speech scientist Benjamin Munson and his colleagues have argued that this is not a mis-articulated /s/ (and therefore, not technically a lisp) as much as a hyper-articulated /s/. Specifically, gay men are documented as pronouncing /s/ with higher-frequency spectral peaks, an extremely negatively skewed spectrum, and a longer duration than heterosexual men. However, not all gay American men speak with this hyper-articulated /s/ (perhaps fewer than half), and some carefully speaking men who identify as heterosexual also produce this feature.”
— Wikipedia, Dec. 2020


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